This tag is for questions specific to down-votes, the community's way of telling peers that their content can be improved. Down-votes on meta site have different meanings.
It seems that people use the down-vote button differently on meta.stackoverflow.com. While it's not a requirement for it to have a strict meaning on any given stackexchange site, the site has little control over how people will choose to apply it.
I therefore raise the question: Why are answers with high downvote counts are faded/muted on meta.stackoverflow.com (or any meta stackexchange site) ?
Meta is a place for discussion where everyone's voice should be treated as equal, regardless of how many people disagree with them. The effect of fading a user's meta answer takes a minority voice and makes it even quieter. This is unfair, imo.
It makes sense that answers on the non-meta sites would be faded/muted as they receive down-votes for much different reason. Namely, people do not down-vote correct answers simply because their personal opinions disagree with the answer author. Answers are down-voted because they are objectively wrong or promote a terrible habit, etc.
But that is not the case on meta. Opinions are subjective and people are using the vote button to reflect agreement/disagreement; not correctness.
I propose that the vote count alone is sufficient to represent the collective's opinion on a meta answer – adding CSS opacity: 0.5;
is an unnecessarily harsh gag to users that may already have trouble finding representation in their community.
:hover
class restores normal opacity even on downvoted answers.-3
wasn't appropriate at first, so they changed it to-8
. Maybe-8
isn't the right number anymore and it should be-15
, or-50
, or never faded at all.